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Pvt. Johnson's coat, Lt. Young's hat, Capt. Lindsay's sword (Courtesy Atlanta History Center) |
Alabama Pvt.
John E. Johnson had yet to meet his infant son. Capt. David J. Lindsay, who had
been deemed too indispensable to be allowed to resign, was with his men of
Company I, 149th New York Volunteers. And 1st Lt. George Young of the 143rd
New York Volunteers was about to go on a horseback assignment that would change
his life.
On July 20,
1864, the lives of these three men and thousands of others collided near and in
the wooded ravines above Atlanta in the Battle of Peachtree Creek -- Lt. Gen. John
Bell Hood’s ill-fated debut as the head of the South’s Army of Tennessee. Hood
had hoped to isolate and destroy Union Maj. Gen. George Thomas’ command before
two other Federal armies could come to his help.
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Lt. Young (Courtesy Seward Osborne) |
Johnson, of
the CSA’s 29th Alabama, and Lindsay were killed in the pitched fighting.
Young suffered a leg wound that would eventually take his life 45 years later.
They all
fought in the sector where Rebel forces perhaps had their most success that day:
against the far right of the Army of the Cumberland. The end of the day saw a
Union victory, just two days before the Battle of Atlanta. Confederates
suffered about 2,500 casualties in just a few hours.
Lindsay’s
sword, Johnson’s bloodstained frock coat and the hat, coat and trousers that
Young was wearing that day area in the same display case at the Atlanta History Center’s “Turning Point” permanent exhibit on the Civil War and Atlanta.
“What
is the chance of those three (soldiers’ belongings) surviving from the same
part of the battlefield?” asked Gordon Jones, the AHC’s senior military
historian and curator. “These three objects, the way they work together is
spooky. They really speak to you.”
These were
ordinary men who fought in a battle that helped shape the future of the
country. On the anniversary of the battle, here’s more about the three and
their units.
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Peachtree Creek artifacts are at left (Picket photo) |
1st Lt. George Young, 143rd NY Volunteers
At 4:30 p.m.
on the afternoon of July 20, Young, 23, of the 143rd New York, was riding with urgent orders to
regimental commanders from the brigade commander, Col. James Robinson.
Confederate forces had launched an unexpected attack, and Robinson’s brigade
was under heavy fire.
Bullets
killed the officer’s horse and struck Young’s leg in the right tibia below his
knee, splitting two bones. Young spent four days in the hospital and returned
to New York, but his combat days were over due to the disability. An honorable
discharge was issued on Oct. 26, 1864.
While he went
on to marry and father two sons, work in the foundry business in Ellenville,
N.Y., purchase a paper mill and serve as Ulster County sheriff, Young could never escape the effects of his wound.
He endured
repeated operations and procedures to heal his leg, but the wound became
reinfected each time.
An account of
Young’s life and his medical condition were detailed by Seward R. Osborne Jr.
in the March-April 1980 issue of the North South Trader. A copy of the article
and other documents and papers pertaining to Young are in the AHC’s collections. (Photo at left, courtesy of Atlanta History Center, shows bullet hole in Young's pants)
Osborne wrote
about how the veteran endured excruciating suffering. By 1906, he was losing
weight and strength. On March 31, 1909, a doctor wrote of Young:
“His
suffering was intense and had become general throughout his right side
including arm as well as leg.” Young died at noon April 1 after trying to write
some letters and drink eggnog.
The chronic infection had finally claimed his life -- 45
years after the Battle of Peachtree Creek.
The chief cause of death was "Gunshot
wound, right tibia, chronic septic infection many years." Young was 66 or 67.
Osborne
– a Civil War historian, collector and writer – for several years had Young’s
hat, coat and trousers. He recalls paying about $200 for the items from a
seller who likely got them at an estate sale. “This guy bought cheap and sold cheap.” Osborne told the
Picket this week.
“What drew me
to it was it was the first uniform that I have ever owned,” he said. “The fact
it had a bullet hole, this is just dripping with research material, which I
love to do. It just snowballed from there.”
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Rebel attack at Peachtree Creek (Courtesy Georgia Battlefields Assn.) |
Osborne,
formerly of Olivebridge, N.Y., said he was unaware that Young’s clothing was at
the AHC until the Picket contacted him this week. “I am ecstatic to learn where it is,”
adding he became emotional upon seeing a photo of the exhibit. He’s been to
Young’s grave several times
Osborne, now
75 and living near Gainesville, Fla., said he sold the uniform several years
later for $15,000. He said he regrets having sold it, knowing the soldier grew
up and later lived not far from where he lived. (The AHC acquired the items in 1992)
Osborne
detailed the conditions of the hat, trousers and coat in the North South Trader
article more than 40 years ago.
He
described the hat as a felt Stetson with gold braid. A five-pointed star made
of red velvet represents the 1st Division, 20th Army
Corps. “The crown has numerous repaired tears which were undoubtedly mended in
the field, either by Young or an (aide), giving it great character.”
The
coat, made of dark blue broadcloth and standard issue for a first lieutenant,
is single-breasted with nine brass buttons. “Its condition is extremely fine
with only the most negligible moth damage.”
Osborne found the trousers to be the most compelling item. They are made of heavy wool with
gold cord on the outer seam, designating an officer of the general staff and
staff corps.
“Just below
the right knee, still very prominent, is the bullet hole. This jagged, gaping
orifice tells the awful tale at a glance. The events from his wounding until
his death literally flashed before my eyes as I viewed the trousers. The
magnetism was powerful. Upon close examination it becomes quite apparent that
the trousers have never been cleaned. They have remained virtually the same
since the wounding. One sees, mingled with the Georgia clay, the stains of the
life blood shed by George Young for his country and the preservation of the
Union.”
The AHC also has a canteen that belonged to the young officer.
Jones said of
the Young items: “There’s no better way
to relate the human experience of combat (that was) literally in people’s back
yards, a mile from where we stand, then to see the artifact with the hole in
it.”
(Photo above right of Lt. Young, courtesy Seward Osborne Jr.)
Pvt. John E. Johnson, 29th Alabama Volunteers
The 29th
was formed in Pensacola, Florida, in February 1862. Its members were recruited from the Alabama counties of Blount, Shelby,
Talladega, Barbour, Russell, Montgomery, Bibb and Conecuh. After service in
Mobile, the regiment joined the Army of Tennessee with 1,000 men in spring
1864. It would endure heavy casualties over the next year.
While Confederate forces were poorly coordinated and
faced challenging terrain at Peachtree Creek, Maj. Gen. Edward C. Walthall’s
division created a crisis on the Federal right flank, briefly collapsing it.
The 29th Alabama, part of Cantey’s Brigade (led by Col.
Edward O’Neal), broke through the Union line and charged into a wooded ravine (map at left courtesy of Georgia Battlefields Association)
“Union troops overlooking
the ravine soon caught the Southerners below in a terrible crossfire,” the AHC
says. “A bullet tore through John Johnson’s neck.” The coat was hit by two
bullets; Jones said he does not know if Johnson was struck by the other.
The Southern
attack, which had brief success, was repulsed by Brig. Gen. John W. Geary’s Second Division.
Jones said
Johnson’s wife and son traveled about 100 miles to see him and were perhaps en
route when he was fatally wounded. They likely saw him in the hospital at some
point.
“John Johnson
died on Aug. 9. His wife saved his bloodstained coat as a reminder of her slain
husband. It is likely that she made it herself; his initials are embroidered
above the right interior breast pocket,” the exhibit says.
A Findagrave page indicates Johnson, of Company C, is buried at Rose Hill Cemetery in Macon,
Ga. He likely passed away at a hospital in that city. The AHC does not have a
photo of the soldier.
The AHC
received a package with the coat from a Houston man in the mid-1980s, saying he
wanted the center to have it. The donor, Jones told the Picket, said the frock
coat was made by his great-grandmother for Johnson in 1862.
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Pvt. Johnson's coat on exhibit (Civil War Picket photo) |
The coat is clearly homemade and Jones said the maker used
extra strips of cloth in one area where material ran out.
The
battlefield long ago became a busy residential neighborhood in the Buckhead
community. Jones believes Johnson and Lindsay died in the same area, perhaps
near current Springlake Park, above Collier Road.
In 2014, on
the sesquicentennial of the battle, the AHC led a tour of the battlefield and,
in a rare moment involving an artifact, took the coat to the site. Someone in a
neighboring residence came out. “He had a box of Minie
balls he found in the yard and he wanted to show to us,” Jones told the Picket.
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Bloodstains near the garment's collar (Atlanta History Center) |
The Alabama
Department of Archives and History details the 29th’s heavy losses
during the last year of the war:
“The
Twenty-ninth was engaged at the battle of Resaca with a loss of about 100
killed and wounded, out of 1,100 men engaged. At New Hope the loss was very
heavy, and at Peachtree Creek the regiment was cut to pieces. Again, July 28,
near Atlanta, half of the regiment was killed and wounded in the fierce and
protracted assault on the enemy's line. The Twenty-ninth then moved into
Tennessee with Gen. Hood, and lost very heavily in casualties at Franklin, and
largely in casualties and prisoners at Nashville. A remnant of it moved into
the Carolinas, and was engaged at Kinston and Bentonville with considerable
loss. About 90 men surrendered at Greensboro, N.C.”
Capt. David J. Lindsay, 149th NY Volunteers
The 149th
and Lindsay were veterans of many battles in the east, including
Chancellorsville, Gettysburg, Lookout Mountain and Kennesaw Mountain.
A few months
before Peachtree Creek, Lindsay, in his mid-30s, tried to leave the army so he
could attend to his family and his failing business, the exhibit says.
“Lindsay’s colonel considered the captain indispensable and refused to allow
him to resign.”
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Regimental colors for the 149th (New York State Military Museum) |
Jones said
Lindsay, a builder, must have become concerned about whoever was running the
business while he was in the service. The officer made one leave request and
two attempts to resign, but a document said Lindsay was a good officer and the
regiment would be harmed by his leaving.
On July 20, the 149th was deployed with
Geary’s division near the far right of the Union line. It was in the 3rd
Brigade, commanded by Col. David Ireland.
A report by regimental commander Col. Henry A. Barnum recounted
the fighting that day and how Yankee troops formed a new line against the Rebel
onslaught (which included the 29th Alabama).
“At this time
Gen. Hooker rode along the line, and with stirring cheers, the contest was
renewed, and the enemy thoroughly repulsed. At about 6 p. m. the brigade
advanced to the ground it occupied in column before the attack, and threw up
works on the second line. In the brave effort to check the mad onslaught of the
enemy Lieut. Col. Charles B. Randall and Capt. David J. Lindsay were instantly
killed, at about the same time.”
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Another view of Capt. Lindsay's sword (Picket photo) |
Lindsay was
shot in the heart as he and others met a charge head-on. The officer from
Onondaga County (Syracuse) left a wife, Mary, and three small children, Albert,
Mary and Cora.
The regiment reportedly suffered its most casualties of the Atlanta Campaign,
with 17 killed, 25 wounded and 10 missing at Peachtree Creek.
Jones said
the staff and field officer sword, engraved with Lindsay’s name, became part of
the DuBose family collection, possibly in the 1970s.